Covering piano hinges on door

Friday, November 9, 2012

As you may already know some of the final look for the Earth Shaman Puppet came from this sculpture of natural items.

His face is the "butt" of a clam shell....his antlers are some kind of 'sea branches' and he has a sea urchin shell behind his head. (and his robe - curled tree bark)

I wanted to share with my kickstarter backers this inspiration so I created this tile with the Earth Shaman and his moon. I am so in love with this little face now....his flattened walrus/manatee nose, his little rabbit mouth and his closed eyelids!

So, here we go, let's make a tile!

You start with a shape to contain the mold making material...I cut the bottom out of a plastic bucket and hot glued it to a piece of wood.

Then pour in the alginate...it is green and smells minty, yummy actually...this is basically dental alginate...if you've ever had your dentist take an impression in your mouth this is what he used. You have to work quick though because it wants to set-up on you

After about 10 minutes, flip it over and pop your clay tile out

Quite an impression the Earth Shaman makes! hehe

This is what we are using to make your tiles...you can get it at Lowes. .

just add water to the Rock Hard and it is ready to pour. tap tap tap the mold to make all the air bubbles rise to the surface(the bottom of the tile that is-away from his face)

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Ok workin' for real now on the full sized Twig Theatre! Flickering Lanterns taking shape!

I started by drawing out the lantern pattern in several different sizes. I really wanted to play with different sizes and placing them next to the theatre to see how it all looked. Can't make assumptions that it will look good just because it looked good on the miniature model (I would soon learn!)

Papa bear was a little too big!

Baby bear was a little too small!

But Mama bear was juuuuuuust right!

I traced out the full sized bracket on a piece of cardboard . Then hot glued it with hinges onto the side of the theatre so I could look at the bracket and lantern together.

Here's how they look together!

whoa pretty magical....it's got that look I want! Don't always know exactly what that is....but when I see it- I know it. Immediately!

Funny thing happens...I am learning....when you try to recreate something you have built in miniature. It doesn't always look as cute or as "magical" as it did when it was small. So, the first lantern mock-up I made (papa bear) was a close replica of the miniature model lantern and I did not like it at all. Two things were disagreeable about this mock-up....it was way too large AND it looked too "straight", or not animated enough I shall say. So I tried smaller and then I tried in between. This middle lantern actually did something funny... it looks like the glass windows are "blowing out" . It made it look somewhat animated and that was it! Thats what it needed!

So, after discussing the various conditions these lanterns may have to endure we decided that fiberglass lanterns would be the best material to use. This would allow flexibilty in design, as well as durability. I anticipate constant packing and unpacking, moisture, UV light, kids tugging and pulling on them.

The only other material that seemed practical would be to actually pound and shape metal into lanterns....maybe later!

So, the next step was to sculpt the shape that we would fiberglass on top of. I started with a 4 inch pvc tube and bulked the clay out around this shape.

I am staying with some friends (John and Annette) while I am working on this project and this workshop is right across from my room! Are you kidding!!?? if I get the urge to make a puppet in the middle of the night... there's that conspiring universe again!

This nifty little wood gadget allowed me to make sure the slope around the pipe stayed consistent! John's idea! ...I love such things!

And then I eventually pulled away from that nifty wood gadget as I tried to make the sculpt match my model.

ok! ready to be fiberglassed! John had some fiberglass 'roll' left over from a tractor roof he repaired so there was no extra purchase to make this happen.

The sculpt was covered in saran wrap and then waxed

Then, down to the barn for the icky part!! John prepping...putting wax on some plexiglass.

My first time fiberglassing!!! Johns' showin' me the ropes

I put a wrap sheet of fiberglass around the sculpt and then dab the resin on it with a brush till it is soaked in. Multiple sheets were applied (4 I think) and then a day or so later the resin is hard enough to sand.

The first lantern is done and the two things to the right will be the bottom for both lanterns. Lastly we will work on the Lantern tops.

From this point I remove from the clay buck from inside and it is a hollow tube....then sand it, cut out the windows and paint.

Trimming one of the fiberglassed lantern tops on a scroll saw

The lanterns after sanding down to a relatively smooth surface...I like some roughness...keeps that homemade feel. Hard to believe this was that blob tower above!

Playing with the window shapes

window shapes dremeled out! Hmm, I like!

Here is the first coat of paint ...hammered copper spraypaint. The paint actually looks like it dimples after you sparay....very cool. Home Depot thing.

Although the spray is a neat effect it is too shiny and doesn't look entirely real so it acted as a basecoat and I added some dark acrylics on top.

Black and Brown ...to age it

Before the paint dried completely I rubbed some of it off.....

And this is what happened! wow...I love it. Totally blew my plans to add green and rust colored copper streaking....it just looks so good this way I think I will leave it. I love cool discoveries and "mistakes"

Will update as soon as I have the window panes completed...almost done!

Painting the inside yellow for higher reflectance...

Now here is the first attempt at window panes....it is milk jug plastic pounded with a hammer and then the shapes are hot-glued into the lantern. This looked great in the dark with candles glowing on the inside, however I did not like the look of it in the daylight...the panes are too opaque and don't match the vision I had. I DO however like the pounded plastic.

SO, I decided I would try the hammered plastic but I would use a clearer plastic. Here is a plastic storage container I had on hand.

I cut out the bottom

Then drew the window shapes and roughly cut them out

Then I pounded them on a rounded anvil (I used a heat gun to soften the plastic slightly) and this is what I got....

Pretty cool huh?

Here are the window shapes all pounded. When the hammer hits the plastic it smashes it, in essence spreading it out, stretching it into a nice curved piece. A perfect result for my needs.

I decided that the panes were to milky colored, so I slapped some orange shellac on the inside of the pane and vwalla! Takes the milkiness right out. I think they look mavelous!

Looks like some kind of leaded amber glass! Just as I had envisioned.

Old pane on right with new panes. much better!

The shellac crazed on one of the panes. It was so beautiful I just left it.

oops...my glue gun caught the corner and the shellac peeled off like a fruit roll up. Thank goodness the shellac is on the inside of the lanterns where there will be no prying fingers! Hopefully the heat/sun won't make them peel...fingers crossed!

Glueing them in. yay for glue guns!

The light shining through...

miniature lanterns and lifesize replicas

miniature theatre

Full-sized theatre!
The cart is coming along quite nicely! And the lanterns are a magical addition.

Brackets (for lanterns)

This is a large cherry board John had in the workshop. John just built a house so he has many materials I have been able to use.

band saw and scroll saw cut

Then I went in and filed down all the corners and tricky spots I couldn't reach with a sander.

I actually used an ebony stain on this cherry and it turned out a nice brown with darker in the cracks. nice effect

mounted on the theatre

they are hinged and fold down

this is the audience side ...I will create some type of Twig logo to go on the panel on this side

TWIG Theatre

Twig Theatre is the name given to the work I do with puppets. As well, it is the name of the mobile (puppet) theatre cart I am currently building. (see below)

My vision for this Old World Gypsy theatre is to roll up to any location, open the doors, hang the flickering lanterns, begin the music and Illuminate the night (or day!) with strange and magical puppet beings!

I feel very excited to bring this type of "soul medicine" to the community. To the parks and streets, the town centers, to festivals and sacred fire ceremonies, to our war veterans, our hospitals, our prisons, outside theatre gatherings and backyard shindigs.... anywhere people feel called to this experience.

The actual full-size TWIG Theatre cart

My desire to share this experience...

My vision for Twig Theatre is to share with you that which inspires and moves me.. My puppetry has come to be the perfect medicine for me. As well as connecting me deeply to natures' shadowy raw magical-ness....It keeps me in touch with my own animating breath, my purpose here, the joy of living in my truth and simple beingness. It is enough that I am here breathing...there is nothing more to become. Little Man Monk is my teacher of "beingness"

Herein this blog lies the creation process of Twig Theatre in its many parts...magical puppet beings, traveling theatre cart, Kickstarter project, photographs and videos, performances and processes, thawts and dreams.....